Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
"What's your name again, sugar doll?" he asked.
"Arlene," she smiled, her eyes already glassing over
from whatever it was J had given her.
Oh sbit.
. . .rain pouring down as 1 run, tears just as heavy flood
ing from my eyesy stumbling blind past the dark buildings
and parked cars until I spot the flashing lights of the police
cars and ambulance. I run harder, panic and desperation the
only things keeping me on my feet. Then Vm there among
the twisted metal, policemen pushing me around until I can
stammer out who I am. Their attitude changes then, but
all I notice is the upside-down car, and the diluted puddles
of crimson staining the pavement below the driver-side
door . . .
That was it for me. My hard-on did a nosedive, and I
made a dash for the alleyway, throwing up my stomach-
full of water with my jeans around my ankles. Blue J
poked his head out of the tarp to see what was wrong
but I waved him away, pulled up my pants, and bolted
for the street.
Arlene was my daughter's name.
Is
her name, I should
say. She survived the crash that killed my wife and son
that awful, night, but not her old man's stupidity in the
months and years to come. Good thing my sister-in-law
Gloria was good enough to take care of her when I couldn't.
I haven't seen Arlene in nearly three years. I wanted to, of
course, but by the time my head had straightened enough
to know what was important in life, she refused to see
me. Can't say I blame her.
Arlene'll be seventeen now, a young woman all set to
head to college next fall. She's probably—
Probably a lot like the young girl you just left stoned on
her~back with Blue J. You're a real fuckin1 hero, Mike.
Fdther-of~the-year candidate, once again.
"Shut up!w I screamed out loud, causing several nearby
pedestrians to take a wide path around me.
One thing crazy people in the city never had was a
lack of elbow room. Was I crazy, though?
Truly
crazy?
I dropped to my knees on the sidewalk, sobbing un
controllably, on one hand ignoring the question, but
then again, perhaps answering it all in the same mo
tion. Who knows? Who cares?
I was so sick of living like this.
I just wanted to end the suffering. Mine, Arlene's . . .
everybody's. From my knees I eyed up the traffic roar
ing by on the street beside me. It would be so easy to
just get up and stumble out in front of—
Stop,
I scolded myself.
You know thafs not the way it
should go down.
True.
I had a better plan.
For months I've been thinking about it, setting
things up, ironing out the kinks. Now all it took was
having the balls to go through with it. I could do it,
though. No worries there. It had nothing to do with me
anyway. It was all for Arlene. I'd destroyed any chance
of a life we might have had together, but if I could pull
my shit together one last time, I could maybe give her a
start on the life she deserved. The life I'd selfishly sto
len away.
Do it then. No more bullshit. For once in your pitiful life
do the right thing.
Climbing to my feet, tears dried up and long gone, I
stood still, eyes closed, thinking about Arlene while
I swayed to the music of the city. I was in no hurry and
didn't give a shit if I was blocking people's way.
Tomorrow,
I decided.
I still had a letter to write and a package to drop in
the mail, but tomorrow afternoon would be perfect. I
could have pulled it off tonight but screw it; tonight I
was going out to get rip-roaring drunk.
Why the hell wouldn't I?
Trust me, I wasn't about to get all teary-eyed leaving
my home and worldly belongings behind. Good rid
dance, as far as I was concerned. Everything I owned
was crap anyway, someone else's tossed-out garbage. I
wouldn't need them again, that was for sure. It was one
of the few perks of planning to kill yourself—you didn't
need to pack luggage.
I should introduce myself better. Sorry, my head
wasn't screwed on quite right yesterday. My name's Mi
chael Fox, Mike to my friends, but unfortunately most
people just called me a bum. I was homeless, that much
was true, but for the record I certainly wasn't a bum. I
was a fairly regular-looking white boy, thirty-nine
years old, five foot ten, one hundred and seventy pounds,
with dark hair and a baby-stubbie beard that steadfastly
refused to grow more than a few downy curls. Sure, I
begged for money and food, but I also worked here and
there, whenever I could. Some of the money I earned I
used to buy clothes, and I washed them regularly at the
local Laundromat. Basically I tried to stay clean, to stay
human,
as best I could.
For the last year and a half, I'd lived in Buffalo, New
York, not that it mattered much. The name of the city
was sort of irrelevant. Where I actually
lived,
was in a
blue metal Dumpster beneath the rusted-out Carver
Street Railway Bridge. For whatever reason, the Dump
ster wasn't used by the city anymore, so me, Blue J, and
another street loser named Puckman had inherited it,
flipped it on its side, crammed it full with our individ
ual yet collectively useless junk, moved in, and called it
home sweet home. Lovely.
It was always cold, always crowded, and it reeked of
cheap booze, vomit, and layer after layer of filthy piss-
and shit-stained clothing. The roof leaked so badly
we were forced to huddle together at one end to avoid
getting soaked, and that was if it was only a light sprin
kle. If it was a downpour—forget it—we may as well
stand outside. The Carver Street Bridge, about thirty
feet above, helped shelter us a bit, but we had to put up
with the rickety old freight trains thundering across it
day and night, every twelve hours.
It was a terrible way to live. Degrading. We were like
sewer rats—worse—at least the rats were too ignorant
to realize how much life like this really sucked. The
best thing I could say about our crummy little corner
of the world was that being located beneath the bridge,
at least I wouldn't have to walk very far to kill myself.
Good thing, too, because I was exhausted, mentally
and physically. So goddamned weary, I wasn't sure if
I'd have enough energy to climb the muddy embank
ment in time to make the next train or not.
As quietly as I could, small brown package in hand, I
stepped over the passed-out prone body of Blue J,
sprawled in his usual late afternoon position blocking
our makeshift plastic tarp doorway. Dropping my last
forty cents—a quarter and three nickels—into his shirt
pocket, I silently wished him luck and eased out the
door without disturbing him.
Outside, Puckman was sitting on the ground, leaning
up against one of the rectangular concrete bridge abut
ments, about fifteen feet to my left. He was busy eating
what looked like a large rat but might just as easily have
been a small brown kitten. Normal society might frown
on such a feast, but around here a meal was a meal. It
had probably been hit by a car and left sticking to the
road somewhere. Roadkill wasn't exactly one of the sta
ples of any homeless person's well-balanced diet, but
when times were tough you ate whatever was available.
Nothing better than a half-burnt/half-raw hunk of un
recognizable meat with the tread marks from a truck
tire still visible on it. It might be disgusting and make
you want to puke—hell, sometimes it
did
make you
puke—but you did whatever you had to do to survive
on the street.
Anyway, Puckman was chewing away on
something,
when his beady little eyes turned and locked on mine.
His face contorted into an angry grimace and, believe
it or not, he actually started to growl. Obviously, he
had no intention of sharing his meal with me. Not that
he had to worry. I didn't want anything to do with the
crazy bastard today.
Puckman wasn't my friend. Never had been, never
would be. Blue J and I put up with him because he paid
us rent, if you could call it that, to share our Dumpster.
Sometimes he paid with money but more often he sup
plied us with food and clothing. He was good at begging
and was an even better pickpocket and thief. Other than
that, he was a no-good lousy bum. It was guys like him
that gave the rest of us homeless people a bad name.
Puckman was a short fet Mexican with greasy black
hair hanging halfway down his back. He didn't even
know where he was most of the time, far too whacked-out
on homemade Screech to realize he wasn't still pining
away in sunny Acapulco, or wherever the hell it was he
came from. He'd been brought up to Canada three
summers ago on a temporary work visa, to pick to
bacco. It was real hard work but they were treated well
and the pay was excellent. The manual labor was too
much for his fat lazy ass, though, and he'd made a dash
for the U.S. border, swimming across the Niagara River
near Fort Erie to illegally enter this home of the brave
and land of the freeloader.
The name Puckman came from his annoying obses
sion with collecting hockey pucks. He'd gathered hun
dreds of them from all over the city and they were
stashed away in dozens of white plastic bags in his cor
ner of the Dumpster. There were so many of the damned
things he was forced to sleep on top of them but he
didn't seem to mind. He told me I'd understand if I'd
ever lived in Canada where hockey was like a religion.
Yeah, right. He'd spent three weeks in Canada, on a
tobacco farm, in the hottest part of August, and some
how he'd become an authority on their favorite winter
sport. What a crock of shit. Puckman wasn't an author
ity on anything; he was just a lunatic and definitely not
someone I was sad to be leaving behind.
"Adios, asshole, see you in hell," I called over to him,
then started walking away.
He growled at me again, smiling triumphantly, like
he'd won some tough-guy macho battle because I hadn't
asked for a nibble of his yummy supper. He wouldn't be
smiling so much if he'd known I had one of his beloved
hockey pucks stuffed in the pocket of my ragged jacket.
When that freight train was screaming toward me,
ready to bust my body into hundreds of pieces, my hope
was that God would grant me one last wish. I wanted to
look down from the bridge, hurl that stupid hard rub
ber disc at Puckman's big fat head, and bean him one
right square in the kisser. Then I could die a happy
man. It probably wouldn't pan out that way but I could
always hope, right?
Without another glance, I began climbing the steep
muddy embankment leading up to Carver Street. From
there, I could walk straight out onto the bridge and wait
for my ticket out of this shitty life. I slipped and stum
bled on the way up but within a minute I was standing
on the first railway tie, at the foot of the bridge.
The Carver Street Railway Bridge was a fine ex
ample of human stupidity at its best. As far as I knew,
bridges were usually constructed to span the distance
over the top of something: things like rivers, canyons,
or other roads and train tracks. Not this bridge; it
stretched a track across an expanse of about eighty feet